Comment: More sophisticated varieties of this technology
have been perfected under black budget programs and will be used in the
future to stage fake 'UFO' events to hoodwink people into believing in an
alien invasion. This sounds off the wall but it's
fully documented in Order
Out of Chaos.

By shooting intense radio beams into the night sky,
researchers created a modest neon light show visible from the ground. The
process is not well understood, but scientists speculate it could one day
be employed to light a city or generate celestial advertisements.

Researchers with the High Frequency Active Auroral
Research Program (HAARP) project in Alaska tickled the upper atmosphere
to the extent that it glowed with green speckles.

The speckles were sprinkled amid a natural display
known as the aurora borealis, or Northern Lights. The aurora occurs when
electrons from a cloud of hot gas, known as plasma, rain down from space
and excite molecules in the ionosphere, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) up.

The HAARP experiment involves acres of antennas and
a 1 megawatt generator. The scientists sent radio pulses skyward every 7.5
seconds, explained team leader Todd Pederson of the Air Force Research Laboratory.

"The radio waves travel up to the ionosphere,
where they excite the electrons in the plasma," Pederson told LiveScience.
"These electrons then collide with atmospheric gasses, which then give
off light, as in a neon tube."

Pederson and his colleagues missed the show, but they
snapped images.

"We unfortunately were indoors watching the data
on monitors during the experiment and were busy scrambling trying to make
sure the effects were real and not some glitch with the equipment,"
he said. "We knew right away it was something extraordinary to show
up in real time on the monitor against the natural aurora, but did not confirm
that it would have been visible to the naked eye until a day or two later
when we had a chance to calibrate the raw data."

The experiment is detailed in the Feb. 2 issue of the
journal Nature.

The research could improve understanding of the aurora
and also help explain how the ionosphere adversely affects radio communications.

It is not yet clear if the aurora must already be active
before an artificial sky show can be induced, says Karl Ziemelis, chief
physics editor at the journal.

If no pre-existing aurora
is required, Ziemelis said, "we are left with the tantalizing (some
would say disconcerting) possibility that such radio-fuelled emissions could
form the basis of a technology for urban lighting, celestial advertising,
and more."

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